The Daily Stoic - Ask Daily Stoic: Ryan and Dominique Dawes on Olympic Gold and Pursuing Excellence
Episode Date: August 26, 2020On today’s Daily Stoic Podcast, Ryan and Olympic gymnast Dominique Dawes talk about the difficulty of striving for an extraordinary goal during a pandemic, how to maintain creative and athl...etic momentum while staying safe, the most important moments that an athlete experiences, and more.Dominique Dawes is a retired American gymnast. She is a three-time Olympian and has won medals at the 1992, 1996, and 2000 Olympic Games. She also won several gold medals in the USA Gymnastics National Championships between 1991 and 1996. Dawes is a member of the International Gymnastics and USA Olympic Halls of Fame.This episode is brought to you by Four Sigmatic. Four Sigmatic is a maker of mushroom coffee, lattes, elixirs, and more. Their drinks all taste amazing and they've full of all sorts of all-natural compounds and immunity boosters to help you think clearly and live well. Four Sigmatic has a new exclusive deal for Daily Stoic listeners: get up to 39% off their bestselling Lion’s Mane bundle by visiting foursigmatic.com/stoic.This episode is also brought to you by Raycon, maker of affordable earbuds with incredibly high-quality sound. Raycon earbuds are half the price of more-expensive competitors and sound just as good. With six hours of battery time, seamless Bluetooth pairing, and a great-fitting design, Raycon earbuds are perfect for working out, travel, conference calls, and more. Get 15% off your order when you purchase Raycon earbuds now, just visit buyraycon.com/stoic.***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow @DailyStoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicFollow Dominique Dawes:  Homepage: https://www.dominiquedawesgymnasticsacademy.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/dominiquedawesInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/daweser/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Dominique-Dawes-195040886586/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
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the 2000 year old philosophy that has guided some of history's greatest men and women.
For more, you can visit us at dailystoic.com.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday. Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic podcast.
My guest today is someone that I grew up watching on television. I guess the first Olympics,
I remember are the Atlanta Olympics. And then obviously she was I guess the first Olympics, I remember, are the Atlanta Olympics.
And then obviously she was also in the Sydney Olympics
in the Barcelona Olympics, which is,
I was only like five years old.
So don't quite remember that one.
But my guest today is Dominique Doz,
otherwise known as Awesome Dawson.
A three time Olympian, a world champion,
gold medal winner. She is the first African American woman
to win an individual Olympic medal in gymnastics. And just an incredible athlete. We actually
happen to have the same speaking agent. That's how we connected. I'm with a company called
VaynerSpeakers and so is Dominic. And so this is an awesome conversation we were talking
about. The business that she's open recently, she's open. The Dominic. And so this is an awesome conversation we were talking about the business that she's
opened recently.
She's opened the Dominic-Daz Gymnastics Academy in Maryland, but she's also obviously a motivational
speaker.
She was the co-chair of the President's Council on Fitness Sports and Nutrition under Barack
Obama.
We talk about her business.
We talk about that sort of competitive drive that makes an athlete
great that you have to have, talk about the sort of the mental domain of gymnastics.
But then also what I'm fascinated with what I find myself talking to athletes over and over again,
it's probably something that I'm struggling with myself, which is how do you sort of turn that off?
How do you have a good life even with your competitiveness, with your drive,
with your ambition. I think this is a very stoic idea. And I was fascinated just how much she brought
up her family, how essential her relationship with her kids, with her faith is, to her happiness,
how this is how she actually judges and defines her success. It was an honor to have her on.
It's just surreal for me sometimes. I mean,
I've read books about an obscure school of ancient philosophy and obviously it's wonderful
to have all of you listening, but sometimes it's just surreal to me that the people that
I get to talk to and have gotten to know. It's just surreal sometimes. As I said, one of
the first athletes that I remember
sort of watching on television, I remember watching
the Olympics with my parents.
And obviously speaking of family, if you're listening
to my other interviews, I am now back in Texas.
We did an RV trip with two kids under four
from Texas to Southern California.
Socially distant did not see a single other person
within six feet, more mass, everything.
But it was actually a wonderful trip,
and then we just made it back.
We did Sedona, Santa Fe, Buffalo Springs Lake,
and Lubbock, and then back to Texas.
And then right back to the grind, not really a crime,
I love it as I talk about in my interview today. Back to writing, back at the grind, not really a grind. I love it as I talk about it in my interview today.
Back to writing, back at the office,
back at the farm, back in the swimming pool.
That's what the kids missed,
probably the most on the trip more than anything else.
Back as we count down the days to the launch of my next book,
a pre-order campaign will be coming, of course,
what I've been talking to you guys about this book,
basically for the last year now, but it is at the printers and we should be
expecting copies any day now.
Lives of the Stoics, the art of living from Xenota Marcus Aurelius,
it's 26 biographies of all the essential, fascinating Stoics that have shaped
so much of the conversations and the writing we've done here at Daily Stoic.
Really proud of it. I'm really
proud of it. I just finished the audiobook, so that'll be coming soon if you're more of an audiobook
person. But anyways, that book's now available on Amazon for pre-order anywhere you get book
sold. There'll be some bonuses, but if you want a pre-order it now, that's awesome. But I'm
excited. And now I go into the book cycle launch, which is always a thing, and you know, trying to keep sane,
and focus on the right things, because I've got the next book to write as well. So a lot of great
stuff here, great interview, and so here we are, here's my conversation, hope you enjoy it,
and I'll talk to everyone very soon. So how are you handling all this? I imagine it must be strange as a mother and a business owner.
I know you have your gym.
How have you guys managed to navigate the pandemic?
The business is doing fine.
Of course, the numbers are a little low because we're open
during a global pandemic.
But it's given us a great opportunity to connect with the families
to get to know the kids really well.
It's been kind of phenomenal building a really, you know, tight close-knit
community right up here in Clarksburg. So it's been fun. It's just challenging juggling
home life with this as a mother of four very small kids, you know, is taxing, but my husband
is doing all the heavy lifting. He's the one, you know, with the kids 24, seven. So I couldn't do it without him.
It gives you a new appreciation of just how hard it would be
to like say, be a single parent or whatever.
I've got two little ones at home too.
And it's just like, how does anyone get anything done?
It's insane.
Yeah, well, I was home with the kids before
and I was on the road traveling
very little, but I would bring the kids with me. So honestly, my whole life has been juggling
and doing it all, but now I am away in a gymnastics gym setting, but I'm doing this for my family.
It's harder right now because all four kids can't come to the gym, three of them refuse
to wear masks. So they are not allowed in the gym
when we're operating.
So they come before we open or after we close
and they get to run around
and enjoy their gym environment.
But it's tough because, you know,
they can't jump into a class
because we're requiring that kids
three and up wear a mask.
And how old are your kids that won't wear a mask?
My soon to be five year old
and then my two and a half year old twins. And so they're two and a half, they don that won't wear a mask? My soon to be five-year-old, and then my two and a half-year-old twins.
And so they're two and a half, they don't have to wear a mask,
but mommy would like for them to wear a mask.
Sure.
They come before and they come after closing
if it's not too late, but my six and a half-year-old,
she literally takes four to six gymnastics
or ninja classes a day and loves it here
and has built so many amazing friendships,
and she's gonna be really good.
No, it's funny. Your kids are having to learn a lesson that it seems like a good portion of American
adults are struggling with, which is that if you can't do a thing, then there are consequences for not
being able to do that thing and it's as simple as that. Yeah, I mean, we're not forcing it. We're not going out and socializing very much anyway,
but I would love for them to come in
and participate in the class
and learn those rules and the structure and the boundaries,
but there will be life without COVID
and there'll be in those classes.
I'm curious about, it must be interesting for athletes
and I guess we're sort of seeing this,
whether it's
the discussion about college football or professional football or I was just reading a fascinating
article about the cross recruiting.
It's like to be great at something, you have to have an almost insane determination for
it, almost an inability to turn it off, a complete disregard for risks and your own safety.
And yet, you know what I mean?
It's like, then obviously there are sometimes
bigger considerations.
It must be strange watching these kids
and then also these parents and then also struggling
with it yourself.
How so?
Well, I'll give you an example.
I had an author friend of mine, he's a mentor of mine.
He had a stroke a few years ago right before his book was supposed to come out.
And the publisher was like, I said, hey, I think we should pause the launch of the book.
And the publisher was saying, well, you know, we'll do all the heavy lifting.
You don't have to do anything.
And my argument was, no author can ever half put out a book.
You would be willing to risk your own safety because you care about your things so much.
It must be so hard for athletes who are not able to train, who are not able to do, to put like like,
I guess what I'm saying is that what it what's required to be a great athlete is a willingness
to run through brick walls. And then society puts up brick walls for safety. And it must be so
hard to make that balance. I would thanks. So I mean, you know, my athletic career is over.
So trying to be an athlete today and put myself in their shoes. It would be quite challenging.
But I do know that athletes right now are still training hard core. Obviously there's some guidelines put in place. I mean, we have a number of competitive level gymnasts that come here multiple times a week. They are wearing face masks. They are not complaining about it one bit.
They're pursuing a sport that they have a deep passion for and they've got goals in it. And so
I don't think it's going to slow down that athlete like you mentioned earlier that have
this unrelenting level of drive and perseverance. So I don't think that's stopping those athletes that
already have that burning desire. Those that were kind of teetering on the fence,
I'm sure they've kind of walked away from the sport
or reconsidered things and maybe stepped back for a bit.
But I would say as a gym owner,
I'm not gonna say I have any balance in my life right now
because a goat is an owner of a business,
and a wife, and a parent of four kids.
But I'll be honest, if my kids and my husband could not be a part of this business,
this would not be something that I would pursue, because I'm not willing to sacrifice
family time, and really time with my spouse for a business.
This is truly a family affair. It's something I have a deep desire and passion for,
and I'm doing it to create a positive environment in the sport of gymnastics and a healthy environment in the sport of ninja these days
I do gymnastics with one ninja and I like ninja warrior. Oh yeah yeah I know but I'm almost 44
so I'm not doing it but watching the kids do it some adults are getting out there and they're
having fun but just you know trying to build these friendships, these bonds, encouraging people to be physically fit, physically active,
and it's not only great for their physical health, as I'm sure you know, but also for
their emotional health. You know, this is truly a dream come true, but, you know, I've
got the drive, I've got the passion, but if there was anything where it was making it
unhealthy for me and my personal life with my spouse
or with my kids, I would give this up in a heartbeat.
I was talking to an NBA player about the bubble
and it was sort of, would you go in the bubble,
would you not go in the bubble?
And he was like, this is what I do.
I can't not, like, not that he didn't have a choice,
but it was like, this is what his whole light,
this is who he was as a person.
And that's sort of what I mean. It's like, if is what his whole light, this is who he was as a person.
And that's sort of what I mean.
It's like, if suddenly I couldn't write,
I don't know if I'd be able to function not doing it.
And so it's this weird tension.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, you're right about that.
Like when you know what your purpose is
and you have a deep passion for it
and you get that taste of making a greater impact in society,
it would be hard to back away.
But I do, I just know how I'm wired
and if it's going to, I guess, disrupt things
in my personal life, then I would have no problem
backing away.
So maybe my drive and desire is not as great
as some of these exceptional athletes are,
but I'm not willing to sacrifice those things
that are very important to me.
And that's also like my quiet time.
I'm very introverted, I'm very private.
You know, I need to make sure that I still have time
for myself, I have time with my kids,
I have time with my husband, and it's not 24-7, obviously.
My husband wouldn't like that anyway, but...
Sure.
You know, it just has to be still very fulfilling for me.
But I love watching young kids and families walk through my doors
and they have this big smile on their faces.
And they're excited to come to my facility.
And then they meet my coaches.
My staff is amazing.
They love working with kids.
They're positive.
They're encouraging their compassionate.
They challenge the kids.
They communicate well to the parents.
And they leave with bigger smiles.
And that just warms my heart that people do see
the Dominic Dawes Gymnastics Academy
as a positive place in their community.
Yeah, I do love this idea of sort of,
because people on the outside who kind of hear
about these insane hours that athletes work
or that entrepreneurs work, I think they kind of think
that it's like you go away and you're not seen
for 18 hour days or whatever.
I've been kind of impressed with,
especially at the college level,
like you sort of walk in and it's like,
oh, people's kids are like,
they sort of have knelded family
and the professional purpose together.
So in a weird way, there's both not a lot of boundaries
and they're all in the same bucket.
It sounds like you've built your gym
and your second career that way.
Well, not only the gym, but even before this,
when I would do speaking engagements,
I would have my family on the road with me.
My husband would be there,
and then once we had children, our first daughter would come,
then our second daughter would come.
It became much more expensive.
Yes.
And it was not a vacation at all.
That was like real, real work traveling with four kids,
even.
Yeah.
And it's, you know, Steven, he was like, oh my gosh,
like they're all coming.
And yes, they were.
Because I couldn't imagine doing the work
and the passion that I have for the work that I'm doing
without my family.
They're such a huge part of who I am today.
And like you said, coaches will bring their kids.
And it's a family affair because at the end of the day,
when our last day is here, who's gonna be standing next to us
on our deathbed, you know?
So it would be our spouse or, you know, our kids.
And if we're blessed to see grandkids
or great-grandkids someday,
that's really what our legacy is truly about.
And so my kids have always been involved.
And I remember one of my Olympic teammates,
she had told me,
because she would travel without her kids.
And she said, Dom, once you take one trip without your kids, you're never
going to bring them back again. And I'm like,
well, really, and I did a trip without my kids, without my
husband. And it was so easy and so much like a vacation, even
though I was technically working. And I remember it feeling
very empty and very lonely. And I remember thinking, you know
what, I'm done being on the road because it is taxing when I bring the kids on them, because you don't want to change their
schedule up too much. And then things came out in the sport of gymnastics, my children love
the sport, and I thought, you know what, let me do something at home now. You know, let me
build this academy in a number of academies in Maryland. And let's bring my kids, you know,
into that. And so that's where we are today. And it's a lot of hard work.
I won't deny that, but I love it.
Yeah, for people who don't know,
we have the same speaking agency,
which is VaynerSpeakers.
And one of the, I don't know if the pandemic
has sort of revealed this for you,
you might have already come to this conclusion,
but I do a lot of speaking also.
And so if you had told me, you know,
at the beginning of 2020, okay,
the second half of 2020, you're gonna do no speaking.
I would have said, well, you know,
from an income perspective, how's that gonna work?
You know, from a family perspective, how's that gonna work?
We're all gonna be on each other's throats, blah, blah, blah.
And what it's been interesting for me is just,
and it sounds like this is what you're doing in their business,
it's like, oh, you can just direct that energy
into other creative avenues that are also
financially positive, right?
And so sometimes we kind of get stuck in these passwords.
Like, this is what I started doing,
so I must do this as long as the opportunities go.
And it's almost like a lack of confidence that, hey, if I stop over here,
I'm creative enough and intelligent enough and create and smart enough,
that I'll just find another positive outlet.
Yeah, I mean, I agree with that, but it does suck being unemployed.
I will say that when it comes to speaking in things that nature,
and yes, if someone would have said, Oh, all those speeches that you had lined up
prior to the Olympics would dry up. I would have thought, no way. That did happen.
And you know, you have to learn to adjust. You have to learn to pivot. And during
the month and month of quarantining, my husband and our four kids, we were
working on getting this gym off the ground, getting equipment in, going through construction,
dealing with contractors, and that was already pre-planned
before COVID hit, so that was already on my schedule,
and that's where we had our focus.
And so during the quarantining period,
I loved it at first because I am in Trouperta,
and I was like, this bubble's amazing.
Right.
Right. You know, I realized, you know, you can either get better
during these times or get better. And so my husband and I, you know,
tried our darnedest to make a commitment to, you know, have quality family time
and enjoy this journey together. And now I have this awesome slideshow
that one of my employees put together that all of the families see when they walk through my doors
of, hey, this is how Dominic and her family
spent their time during quarantining.
They put together this business
and we were able to open our doors
even during a global pandemic.
So, it's been a beautiful thing.
We're kind of rising up, I think, through the ashes
and pursuing, having an ability to pursue something
you know that I have a passion for is truly a gift. I know too many people who wake up each
and every day and they do not like what they do and they you're not like who they're with and
I'm very blessed in that regard that you know I have a strong faith you know I love my spouse and I
love you know my kids and I love the gifts
that God has blessed me with and that's why
this academy has been very special for all six of us involved.
No, I'm daily so we talk about sort of the distinction
between a live time and dead time
and sadly I've got to imagine the last six months or so
have been a lot of dead time for people.
And nobody chose this as nobody's fault,
but you do ultimately choose what you do with that time.
And you know, you'll hear it in people's language.
They go, oh, when things go back to normal,
as if they're kind of just wait,
it's like this caught them by surprise,
and now they're just waiting for another thing
to catch them by surprise.
Instead of going, here are the facts on the ground.
I have to react and, you know, produce something in this interim period that I'm proud of
or that moves the ball forward in some way because who can afford to just, you know,
let life be something that happens to them.
Yeah, I know.
I mean, this is our new normal, though I do believe there will be life without
COVID. But I think it'll ever go back to how it was before. It's just crazy to think. One day we
woke up and all of a sudden, you know, you lose some of your freedoms or lose your job.
You know, and there's no other, you know, employment to go back to. I'm sure, you know, there's a lot of families out there that are truly, truly struggling financially, emotionally, you know, socially.
I mean, the fact that you can't connect and, you know, interact with other families, you know, is a very, you know, can be a very dark time for many families. Though, you know, for me and my family, we really have, you know, leaned on our faith greatly,
that we always had a strong relationship with,
and that has kind of helped us put things in, you know,
perspective and to even see that there are areas
where we really are blessed.
And you mentioned being an introvert,
I sort of count my blessings there.
It's like, for the last six months,
not only have I not had to go to any coffee meetings,
I haven't even had to hem in ha
about whether I was obligated to accept them or not.
But then I look at my wife,
and I look at my oldest, who's four,
who are just sort of deeply social creatures,
and you see just the impact that that hat,
like if I lose energy being around people,
well, what about the people who lose energy being around people, well, what about
the people who gain energy being around other people? And that's sort of a, that's like
a less discussed cost of COVID, certainly.
Oh, well, my husband's struggling. Let me not deny that. I mean, I, like I said, I'm
an introvert. I love being around people though, and I love connecting with people, but
I, you know, gain a little bit more strength when I'm, you know, I need my downtime.
A husband is an extreme, extreme extrovert. And so are two of my other kids, and you can just see the toll that it is taking on them. However, that's why this business has been such a gift because it has allowed us the opportunity.
You know, we opened our doors and really were able to create this very healthy and exciting
and positive community here and meet so many new friends and families so much so that
we ended up relocating closer to the gym environment, which has been really nice.
So again, this happened all during a global pandemic and we've been allowed to open, but
that has been a gift for my very extraverted husband
to connect with people regularly.
He needed that.
Yeah.
I'm curious.
I got a sort of a gymnastics question for you,
which is it feels like gymnastics is unique
among athletic events in that it's both an individual
and a team sport.
And obviously, I'm so fascinated with the role
that ego plays in life and in business and athletics.
How does an athlete balance the sort of intensity
and the drive and the commitment
to their own career and advancement,
and then understanding that we're sort of being scored
as a collective and if that disease of me creeps in as Parallel calls it, none of us are
going to be successful.
I mean, I guess with me right now, everything with this company, it is like I mentioned
earlier, a family affair.
It's not solely, you know, about me.
My husband's very involved.
This is for our four kids, not only for their futures,
but even for them today to build friendships
and challenge themselves physically and socially and emotionally.
And so the focus right now is not just upon me, myself,
and I or my ego, that matter.
It really is about my family.
I'll be honest, if I did not have a family, young kids,
and if everything did not publicly come out
with regard to everything in the sport of gymnastics
as it did, I don't see that I would have been pursuing this.
But with my two oldest loving the sport
and having a passion for it, obviously,
the seed was planted from me. I wanted to make sure that they had a very healthy and positive environment in the sport and having a passion for it. Obviously the seed was planted from me.
I wanted to make sure that they had a very healthy and positive environment in the sport.
And so that's really been my drive. And it's not solely on just what my soul goals are.
So it is maybe the way that you sort of get through if we're trying to generalize this,
it's sort of a mission or a larger purpose
helps the individual subsume the ego
and sort of take out some of the selfishness
because it's like, we're not doing this for me,
we're doing this for the family,
or we're not doing this for us or even the team,
we're doing it for the country
in the case of an Olympic team,
is that sort of how you do that?
No, it's, you know, I would say really it has to do with
the betterment of the sport.
There's thousands and thousands of young girls and boys
in the sport of gymnastics.
I do not have boys gymnastics at my facility
that we do pursue ninja for boys and girls,
but this is really
me trying my best to save a sport that I love. And I'm trying to make sure that
young girls that pursue the competitive level aspect of the sport and even the rec and preschool
level of the sport don't have the same experience that I had, physically, emotionally, verbally, and in many ways.
It can be done in a healthier environment,
and I think that's really what's driving me
with my two oldest loving the sport.
I'm gonna ensure that they have a positive experience,
and I wanna make sure all the other
thousands of young girls that come through my facility
have a very positive and uplifting experience as well.
That must be such, so difficult in gymnastics.
It, again, somewhat unique of the sports, like you're being judged, right?
There's literally judges sitting there in the competition, you know, giving you a score.
So there has to be this kind of intense perfectionism.
It's not just about getting the outcome like, hey, did the ball go in the hoop?
It doesn't matter if it was pretty or not.
How do you balance that perfectionism with what we would probably argue is what you want
as like just a healthy individual in the world? How do you turn that on and off?
It's pretty challenging. I mean, gymnastics does attract perfectionists or it turns you
into a perfectionist if you have that seed already planted in you. And, you know, just being the subjective sport that it is, you do, like you mentioned,
know that you're being critiqued and judged and not fairly.
Because what one person will think is beautiful, gymnastics and flawless,
another will see it maybe as sloppy.
And it's very challenging to communicate that to a young kid.
That in one light, they're doing exceptionally well and scored well, and in one one light, they're doing exceptionally
well and scored well and then the next light they're not. You know, I think it's just trying
to not focus so much on scores, not focus on the numbers, but really focus on them striving
for their personal best. Right. Understanding why they're pursuing the sport of gymnastics.
Why they're doing the sport and hopefully it's you know them developing a deep love for the sport of gymnastics and wanting to challenge themselves physically wanting to challenge themselves.
You know in many different areas. I mean the sport of gymnastics I truly believe is like one of the hardest sports.
You know out there the level of commitment, you know, the physicality,
the fearlessness that you need to have
is pretty exceptional.
Writing has this element to it where, you know,
you spend all this time, you know, making this thing,
it's supposed to do X and then, you know,
ultimately you're scored based on the Amazon ranking
or the appearance on the, you appearance on the New York Times list,
but you have to kind of have to separate
that sort of, there's like the external scorecard
which can go your way and obviously you don't win
if it doesn't go your way, yet you also kind of have
to have this stronger inner scorecard where you know,
like, hey, I did my best, I did what I
set out to do and I imagine that's that's probably what you try to teach kids and the earlier you
pick that up, the healthier your relationship with the sport will be. Well we want them you know like
we want them to focus on their personal best, we want them to make sure that the passion the drive
is coming from within, but it's something that they want to do, and to recognize that their teammates are just that, they're their teammates and not
competitors. And the sport of gymnastics really does have a culture that is based on competition and
you're constantly viewing everyone as a competitor, you're judging everyone, you're critical, you focus
on things, you focus on your imperfections instead of
focusing on the positives or the things that you did do well, you leave each and every practice
thinking about the things you didn't do well. And that's what we're hoping to change,
to help build up a young kid's self-esteem, not with fluff, not with, you know, we're not just
telling everyone they did a great job. Right. But just kind of encouraging people to recognize
that hard work does pay off,
but it can be done in a healthier environment.
Yeah, I think I read something from Billie Jean King once
or she was sort of saying the paradox of being a great athlete.
I'd be curious about your experiences.
It is that precisely the perfectionism, the focus on what could have been better, where you
fell short, you know, what went wrong, is what makes you great.
It obviously creates a feedback loop where you are getting better, but it also makes it
extraordinarily difficult to enjoy or even notice that you are at the peak of your game
or that you've accomplished an incredible amount.
Like, you're not able to enjoy the peak
because all you're focusing on is the next peak
or how imperfectly you got there.
Exactly, like what you did in a accomplished,
like it's never enough.
I mean, there was just this great piece on HBO
and it was talking about the mental aspect
of the sport of gymnastics and how many Olympians
are just never satisfied.
And then when even their career is over,
there's that kudawada shura.
There's that what's next because their identity
is wrapped up in being that particular athlete
and nothing more because you sacrifice so much,
especially if you did it since your childhood.
So it is hard to kind of, I guess, be satisfied,
but that's what makes I think a lot of athletes so great
that they have that.
Like you mentioned before, that drive.
We always wanna do more and be better.
Yeah, and especially if you came from a place in your childhood
where maybe you didn't fully feel enough or you felt like,
hey, you know, it's like when I'm succeeding at this,
this is when, you know, I feel, I feel like my parents are proud of me
or I feel like I'm more accepted.
We can pick up all these like super complicated issues
that kind of get intertwined with winning or success
or money or fame. And then it, I think the saddest hardest part is you finally get everything
that you think you wanted. And it didn't do what you hoped. And so it's encouraging to me to hear
you talk about the family stuff because that is the one
Element for me that turned out to be even better than I thought. Do you know what I mean? Like
Hitting number one was great, but anti-climactic, you know
I've never felt like any experiences with my family were anti-climactic. My wedding was not anti-climactic
You know what I mean? Yeah, I mean, you know waking up in the the middle of the night, hearing a screaming baby at 2am, not the most joyful, you know, no experience in life, but it's very fulfilling and I know I'll miss those days
and I really don't miss being at the Olympics. You know, I don't reminisce,
really? No, and I don't reminisce and miss, oh, that feeling that I got in 1996 standing on
the podium, which I was very honored to be a part of that,
and honored to have such amazing teammates,
and to win a gold medal and make history.
But when I dream about exciting moments
and memories in my life, those don't come up.
They really don't.
It's the time with my spouse, or making that commitment
to say I do, because I never thought
I would get married coming from a divorced household and seeing so much heartache
and pain there or, you know, birthing to children naturally and then birthing twins, you know,
like, wow, that was just, you know, a miracle and amazing, but people do it all the time.
Like they do it every day, but it was those are the moments that I really relish and they
make me smile and they're fulfilling for me.
And then the moments today of a young kid walking
through my door, smiling or the story that I've heard
of parents that had their kids in gymnastics,
they had a negative experience, they were in a very
unhealthy environment, too much pressure,
a lot of negativity, they get into our classes here,
they have a blast and they're smiling
and they can't wait to come back.
That's fulfilling.
From that saying that the Olympics
doesn't matter to me, it definitely did,
but that's not what, you know, that's not what fulfills me,
and that's not what makes me whole.
And it was a little difficult, I will say,
as a young athlete, winning gold,
sitting on top of the podium and being like,
oh, this is it, like I'm not fulfilled. What just happened here, this is what, and then I when I reached
investing and putting away over a million dollars, I was like, oh, wait, I'm supposed to feel so
much better about myself than so great, but I know. And so it's those moments with your family.
It's those moments with your spouse. It's those moments knowing that you've planted an
amazing positive seed in the stranger's life. That those are the moments, um, you know, that'll
that fulfill us and that'll last with us for a lifetime. Yeah, I remember when when my book hit
number one for the first time I was mowing the lawn, you know, the text came in and it's like I
still have to finish mowing this lawn. And it was this thing, you know, it was like a five year thing in the making and it had been this, and I expected to feel
X and I felt sort of the lack of X. And then when I think about like the best moments of my life,
you know, it's like sitting on a porch swing with one of my kids and they say something cuter, you know, it's weird how the actual ordinary things are actually
what you find to be extraordinary and the extraordinary things as great as they are
and as much as they facilitate, you know, you couldn't have gotten the million dollars
without winning the Olympics and you couldn't open the gym without the, but, but it's, it's how little we actually need
to be happy and, and yet we spend, unfortunately, people spend so much of their time. Like,
some people feel that, I guess, I'd be curious what you think. So, so they get on the,
they get on the, on the medal standard, they hit number one, and it's anti-climactic.
You can kind of go two ways when you experience that number one is you go, oh, okay, this
actually isn't it.
I got to go find something deeper and more meaningful.
And then other people go, oh, it's not one super bowl that I needed.
It's the most super bowls of all time.
Then I'll have it.
Yes, and then it'll be never enough.
You know, I've done motivational speaking, you know, as you have for a while, and, you know,
I've done work with presidents and very known and very powerful, you know, people.
And I remember on stage, people asked me, oh, what's like the most exciting thing you've done?
And I was like, well, actually last week, my two dogs who went on this walk and I sounded pretty cool.
And they were like, are you serious?
And I'm like, no, like I'm in the moment
during those periods of life that you said,
you know, you say are ordinary,
but those are really the extraordinary moments
in our life that we need to appreciate.
The other day, I'm driving home with my daughter
after a very long day at the gym
and we were both exhausted and we see a double rainbow that she points out
And she's screaming and so giddy and so excited, you know, and just kind of like that's a moment that I'll never
forget and you know just
recognizing you know her
You know reaction to that and how exciting and then we started talking about a beach trip
We had goodness. I guess it was a couple of years ago where we saw a double rainbow that and how exciting. And then we started talking about a beach trip we had, goodness, I guess it was a couple of years ago,
where we saw a double rainbow vet.
And she remembered, I was like,
how does she remember that?
It was years ago.
But it's those little moments in appreciating those
that truly are gifts.
And they are the extraordinary moments in our life
that we will hold onto.
But many of us see them as ordinary.
We don't appreciate them. We don't recognize the beauty of them. And so we always think we've got to. But many of us see them as ordinary. We don't appreciate them.
We don't recognize the beauty in them.
And so we always think we've got to be on top of that podium.
We've got to win not just one Super Bowl, like you said,
but multiple Super Bowls.
And that's what I'm going to be fulfilled.
And I truly think everything that will fulfill us in life,
it's right in front of us.
Just many of us choose not to see it.
And I went through life many years not seeing it. And it is my husband that kind of opened my eyes to the fact that it's
truly those simple, simple, simple moments in life that are truly gifts for all of us.
Yeah, and I just love how timeless that idea is to, I mean, you go back to the Stokes
and you know, Mark is the realist is the emperor of Rome and he's like, what is this?
He's like, so I have like a fancier cloak than other people.
This doesn't change anything.
Or 500 years ago, Blaze Pascal said,
all of humanity's problems stem from our inability
to sit quietly in a room alone.
And you're like, oh yeah, if I could just be here
like with this, whether it's cleaning up the gym
in the morning, I love that experience of getting somewhere
you're turning the lights on,
and they're flickering up.
Like when I get into my office in the morning
and just I'm the first one there, there's no one there,
it's quiet, and I get to dig into this thing I love.
To me, that's way more satisfying than a chunk
of a royalty check or a profile in a newspaper or something. It's weirdly being able to tap into the humanness of it, I think that's the most wonderful.
That's very true. I guess as we are both very accomplished individuals, I know many people listen and be like, well, of course they feel that way because they've accomplished certain things
or whatever don't have certain life struggles or challenges they think.
And I will say the happiest people that I know in life are the people that have very little.
You know, it's about their relationships.
It's about the simple things in life and they are living a much less stress-filled life than many of
us ever could. Right, yeah. Blessed are the meek. And I think too, when I think, although
I'm very privileged and like you I've made some money in, I have some nice things, but like the things that I'm most happy about,
or the things that I enjoy the most, were not at all a function of the success or the privilege.
Do you know what I mean? It's like, like, it's not the car that makes me happy if you told me I had
to sell the car and get a different car, that isn't what
would get me up out of bed in the morning. It would be where I'm driving the car and what I get to do.
You know, like, it's just because someone has something, like the Stowe's talked a lot about this.
They're like, look, it's better to be rich than poor if you had a choice, but a wise sort of
successful person should be able to be happy with either because the the external
thing isn't actually changing what you're feeling inside.
Yeah, I mean, it doesn't fulfill you.
We just packed up and moved to come a little closer to the gym.
And I realized how many things I have.
My husband thinks I'm a hoarder, but I'm like, everything is sentimental.
He's like, no, that scarf is not sentimental.
You've got to be right.
And one thing that I did realize is I said to the movers,
I was like, you know what, let's leave these boxes
in the garage and see how much I really need
and miss these items.
And I really don't miss the stuff.
And if someone, you know, if I had to, you know,
leave a vehicle or whatever, you know, somewhere
and I would never see it again, you know,
that vehicle or what have you definitely did not, you know,
fulfill me, it's definitely the relationships that we have in such
in life, not the things.
And I think we do think the things will fulfill us,
the accomplishments and the accolades will fulfill us
or the amount of money will fulfill us.
And when you do achieve that, there is this emptiness.
Like, oh, wait, I didn't get the satisfaction
that I thought I would. And if you recognize that and you this emptiness like, oh, wait, I didn't get the satisfaction that I thought I would.
And if you recognize that and you learn from it, then you'll, you know, strive to focus on the things that will fulfill you.
And that's honestly relationships and impact and, you know, pursuing things you love, um, they, or worse people because they have the, the huge house or the, the, the fancy cars or, or the lifestyle or whatever.
Ironically, to facilitate that they end up depriving themselves of the ordinary things that do make them happiest, you know, like you're, you, you, like for me, like my definition of success, what makes me happy is the autonomy to be able to say,
I don't wanna do that, the autonomy to make my own hours
or the autonomy to go for a run in the middle of the day
or whatever.
And there's a scenario where you could be more successful,
more famous, more in demand,
and the cost of that is actually the freedom
to see your kids whenever you want them to
or to have them come to you.
If you had 50 gyms all over the country and you were traveling to each one, you wouldn't
be able to take classes with your daughter all the time.
No, I mean, exactly.
I mean, I met with this wonderful marketing consultant who was guiding me in the beginning
of this.
And he's like, oh, do you see yourself turning this into a franchise and going nationwide?
And I was like, oh, do you see yourself turning in this into a franchise and going nationwide? And I was like, absolutely not.
And he was like, oh, but you have the ability to make this so much greater.
And I think greater for me is still having the quality of life and the time with my children
and me remaining married to my husband and me knowing my kids and my kids knowing me. And so, you know, while I do want to do multiple locations of this gymnastics academy in the
Montgomery County area and the state of Maryland or in the DMV area, I definitely will not
sacrifice my family time, you know, and I will not spread myself too thin because I know
it wouldn't be fulfilling.
I don't need to be the next chick full-a.
I don't care.
It doesn't.
You know, that doesn't drive me.
It really, you know, I know at the end of my days,
I truly should not be judged upon, you know,
or look, my legacy to me is not wrapped up in my Olympic achievements
or my net worth, but really, what's your relationship like
in your home?
And, you know, do you truly
love your spouse? Do your spouse truly love you? Do you enjoy each other's company? Do you
know each other? Do you grow together or did you grow apart? And then with regard to your
kids. And so, you know, I just know in my deathbed, I don't want to have those regrets that
I wish I spent more time at home and less time at the gym. I've seen too many
gym owners that didn't do like necessarily the franchise model, but they sacrificed everything.
You know, they lost the marriage, they don't know their kids, and they're miserable, but they're
sure as heck extremely successful in the world-wise, but that's not what I want for my life.
Yeah, I think that's the question I always like I try to go,
what do I want my day to look like?
Like, what do I want my life to look like day in and day out?
And I try to back out my decisions from there.
Because yeah, you could chase it like success tends to create more success,
but it doesn't necessarily create more quality of life.
So I love that you think that way.
Your business sounds awesome.
I'm so glad we got to meet.
Thank you for doing this.
And hopefully we can see each other in person at an event someday.
Yeah, exactly.
Once we can all get out and socialize again,
that'll be great.
Yes, awesome.
We'll have a great day.
We'll talk soon.
Take care.
Thank you.
Bye.
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